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Start Free TrialCarriers Act, 1865 Schedule 1
Title: Schedule
State: Central
Year: 1865
SCHEDULE Gold and silver coin. Gold and silver in a manufactured or unmanufactured state. Precious stones and pearls. Jewellery. Time-pieces of any description. Trinkets. Bills and hundis. Currency notes of the Central Government, or notes of any Bank, or securities for payment of money, English or Foreign. Stamps and stamped paper. Maps, prints and works of art. Writings. Title-deeds. Gold or silver plate or plated articles. Glass. China Silk in a manufactured or unmanufactured state, and whether wrought up or not wrought other materials. Shawls and lace. Clothes and tissues embroidered with the precious metals or of which such metals form part. Articles of ivory, ebony or sandal-wood. Art pottery and all articles made of marble. Furs. Government securities. Opium. Coral. Musk, Itr, Sandal-wood oil, and other essential oils used in the preparation of itr or perfumes. Musical and scientific instruments. Feathers. Narcotic preparations or hemp. Crude India-rubber. Jade, Jade-stone and amber. Gooroochand or Gooroochandan. Cinematograph films and apparatus. Zahir Mohra Khatai. Platinum. Iridium. Palladium. Radium and.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionEMPLOYEE'S COMPENSATION ACT, 1923 Schedule 2
Title: SCHEDULE II
State: Central
Year: 1923
.....with the loading or unloading of any such vehicle; or (ii) employed, 20[***], in any premises wherein or within the precincts whereof a manufacturing process as defined in clause (k) of section 2 of the Factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948), is being carried on, or in any kind of work whatsoever incidental to or connected with any such manufacturing process or with the article made 4[whether or not employment in any such work is within such premises or precincts], and steam, water or other mechanical power or electrical power is used; or (iii) employed for the purpose of making, altering, repairing, ornamenting, finishing or otherwise adapting for use, transport or sale any article or part of an article in any premises 21[***] 5[***] 4[Explanation.--For the purposes of this clause, persons employed outside such premises or precincts but in any work incidental to, or connected with, the work relating to making, altering, repairing, ornamenting, finishing or otherwise adapting for use, transport or sale of any article or part of an article shall be deemed to be employed within such premises or precincts; or] (iv) employed in the manufacture or handling of explosives in.....
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionStates Reorganisation Act 1956 Schedule VI
Title: Sixth Schedule
State: Central
Year: 1956
THE SIXTH SCHEDULE (Sec section 113) (1) Engineering Colleges and Schools of Technology. (2) Medical Colleges. (3) Agricultural Colleges. (4) Veterinary Colleges. (5) Government hospitals providing for special treatment, such us, (i) tuberculosis hospitals and sanatoria; (ii) cancer hospitals, (iii) radium institutes. (iv) mental hospitals, (v) leprosy hospitals and sanatoria, and (vi) hospitals providing for Ununi or Ayurvedic treatment, (6) Research institutes, such as.-- (i) irrigation research institutes, (ii) Government analysts' departments, and (iii) serum institutes. (7) Central Jails. (8) Borstal Schools, Reformatory Schools and Certified Schools. (9) Police Training Colleges and Institutes. (10) Fire Services Training Schools. (11) Hotels for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Backward Classes. (12) Photo Registry Offices. (13) Central Records Offices. (14) Forest Schools. (15) Finger Print Bureaux.
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionFactories Act, 1948 Schedule III
Title: The Third Schedule
State: Central
Year: 1948
..... 22. Noise induced hearing loss (exposure to high noise levels).] 3 [23. Beriyllium poisoning. 4 [24. Carbon monoxide poisoning. 25. Coal miners' pnoumoconiosis. 26. Phosgene poisoning. 27. Occupational cancer. 28. Isocyanates poisoning. 29. Taxic nephritis.] ______________________ 1. The existing Schedule re-numbered as the Third Schedule (w.e.f. 26-10-1976) by Act 20 of 1987, section 46 (w.e.f. 1-12-1987). 2. Inserted by Act 94 of 1976, section 45 (w.e.f. 26-10-76). 3. Inserted by Act 20 of 1987, section 46 (w.e.f. 1-12-1987). 4. Substituted by S.O. 343 (E), dated 19th April, 2001 (w.e.f. 19-4-2001).
View Complete Act List Judgments citing this sectionCarriers Act, 1865 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1865
.....was once supposed to be the exact position of a carrier who had contracted for himself as favourably as the law of England would permit. It was, in fact. long supposed in England that. while a carrier could by contract relieve himself from most of his liabilities, his power of doing so slopped short of liability for negligence or misconduct. Such is the view of the law taken by Mr.Justice Storey in his "Commentaries on the Law of Bailnients" section 549. and such is under stood to be still the law in America. But a series of decisions in the English Courts overturned the older doctrine, and it was settled that a carrier could, by a properly framed contract, deliver himself from liability even for misconduct or negligence. The liberty thus conceded was. however, found to be a practical evil and the English Legislature intervened by 17 and 18 Vic.. Cap 31. The nearly contemporaneous enactment of the Indian Legislature, embodied in Sec. XI of Act XVIII of 1854. is obviously aimed at the same object. It seems very undesirable to adopt the rule contained in section VII of 17 and 18 Vic. Cap. 31. which permits companies to contract themselves, on certain conditions, out of their.....
List Judgments citing this sectionWORKMEN'S COMPENSATION ACT, 1923 Complete Act
State: Central
Year: 1923
.....where death results an amount equal to43[fifty] per cent of from the injury the monthly wages of the deceased work- man multiplied by the relevant factor; or an amount of45[Eighty] thousand rupees, whichever is more; (b) where permanent total an amount equal to46[sixty] per cent of disablement results from the monthly wages of the injured the injury workman multiplied by the relevant factor; or an amount of49[Ninety] thousand rupees, whichever is more. Explanation 1: For the purposes of clause (a) and clause (b), "relevant factor", in relation to a workman means the factor specified in the second column of Schedule IV against the entry in the first column of that Schedule specifying the number of years which are the same as the completed years of the age of the workman on his last birthday immediately preceding the date on which the compensation fell due; Explanation II: Where the monthly wages of a workman exceed50[four] thousand rupees, his monthly wages for the purposes of clause (a) and clause (b) shall be deemed to be50[four] thousand rupees only; (c) where permanent partial disablement results from the injury (i) in the case of an injury specified in Part II of.....
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